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The suit papers include photos of Dye's mangled leg and requests for videos of the incident.

"The video's going to tell a lot," Schietzeit told the newspaper.

"If the video gives rise to liability, then we will evaluate our options from there in terms of beginning a lawsuit, but as of now we haven't seen it."

Neither the MTA nor Dye provided comment, but the comedienne who now lives with her mother in South Carolina recently tweeted she would never ride the subway again while calling for free rides for the rest of her life.

"I should get an unlimited metrocard FOR LIFE but…I'll never ride the train again," Dye tweeted late July.